COBRA FAQs
What is COBRA continuation health
coverage?
Congress passed the landmark
Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act (COBRA) health
benefit provisions in 1986. The
law amends the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act, the Internal
Revenue Code and the Public Health
Service Act to provide
continuation of group health
coverage that otherwise might be
terminated.
What does COBRA do?
COBRA
provides certain former employees,
retirees, spouses, former spouses,
and dependent children the right
to temporary continuation of
health coverage at group rates.
This coverage, however, is only
available when coverage is lost
due to certain specific events.
Group health coverage for COBRA
participants is usually more
expensive than health coverage for
active employees, since usually
the employer pays a part of the
premium for active employees while
COBRA participants generally pay
the entire premium themselves. It
is ordinarily less expensive,
though, than individual health
coverage.
Who is entitled to benefits under
COBRA?
There
are three elements to qualifying
for COBRA benefits. COBRA
establishes specific criteria for
plans, qualified beneficiaries,
and qualifying events:
Plan Coverage -
Group
health plans for employers with 20
or more employees on more than 50
percent of its typical business
days in the previous calendar year
are subject to COBRA. Both full
and part-time employees are
counted to determine whether a
plan is subject to COBRA. Each
part-time employee counts as a
fraction of an employee, with the
fraction equal to the number of
hours that the part-time employee
worked divided by the hours an
employee must work to be
considered full time.
Qualified Beneficiaries -
A
qualified beneficiary generally is
an individual covered by a group
health plan on the day before a
qualifying event who is either an
employee, the employee's spouse,
or an employee's dependent child.
In certain cases, a retired
employee, the retired employee's
spouse, and the retired employee's
dependent children may be
qualified beneficiaries. In
addition, any child born to or
placed for adoption with a covered
employee during the period of
COBRA coverage is considered a
qualified beneficiary. Agents,
independent contractors, and
directors who participate in the
group health plan may also be
qualified beneficiaries.
Qualifying Events -
Qualifying events are certain
events that would cause an
individual to lose health
coverage. The type of qualifying
event will determine who the
qualified beneficiaries are and
the amount of time that a plan
must offer the health coverage to
them under COBRA. A plan, at its
discretion, may provide longer
periods of continuation coverage.
Qualifying Events for Employees:
Qualifying Events for Spouses:
-
Voluntary or involuntary
termination of the covered
employee's employment for any
reason other than gross misconduct
-
Reduction in the hours worked by
the covered employee
-
Covered employee's becoming
entitled to Medicare
-
Divorce or legal separation of the
covered employee
-
Death of the covered employee
Qualifying Events for Dependent
Children:
-
Loss of dependent child status
under the plan rules
-
Voluntary or involuntary
termination of the covered
employee's employment for any
reason other than gross misconduct
-
Reduction in the hours worked by
the covered employee
-
Covered employee's becoming
entitled to Medicare
-
Divorce or legal separation of the
covered employee
-
Death of the covered employee
How does a person become eligible
for COBRA continuation coverage?
To be
eligible for COBRA coverage, you
must have been enrolled in your
employer's health plan when you
worked and the health plan must
continue to be in effect for
active employees. COBRA
continuation coverage is available
upon the occurrence of a
qualifying event that would,
except for the COBRA continuation
coverage, cause an individual to
lose his or her health care
coverage.
What group health plans are
subject to COBRA?
The
law generally covers health plans
maintained by private-sector
employers with 20 or more
employees, employee organizations,
or state or local governments.
What process must individuals
follow to elect COBRA continuation
coverage?
Employers must notify plan
administrators of a qualifying
event within 30 days after an
employee's death, termination,
reduced hours of employment or
entitlement to Medicare.
A
qualified beneficiary must notify
the plan administrator of a
qualifying event within 60 days
after divorce or legal separation
or a child's ceasing to be covered
as a dependent under plan rules.
Plan
participants and beneficiaries
generally must be sent an election
notice not later than 14 days
after the plan administrator
receives notice that a qualifying
event has occurred. The
individual then has 60 days to
decide whether to elect COBRA
continuation coverage. The person
has 45 days after electing
coverage to pay the initial
premium.
How long after a qualifying event
do I have to elect COBRA coverage?
Qualified beneficiaries must be
given an election period during
which each qualified beneficiary
may choose whether to elect COBRA
coverage. Each qualified
beneficiary may independently
elect COBRA coverage. A covered
employee or the covered employee's
spouse may elect COBRA coverage on
behalf of all other qualified
beneficiaries. A parent or legal
guardian may elect on behalf of a
minor child. Qualified
beneficiaries must be given at
least 60 days for the election.
This period is measured from the
later of the coverage loss date or
the date the COBRA election notice
is provided by the employer or
plan administrator. The election
notice must be provided in person
or by first class mail within 14
days after the plan administrator
receives notice that a qualifying
event has occur
How long does COBRA coverage last?
COBRA
establishes required periods of
coverage for continuation health
benefits. A plan, however, may
provide longer periods of coverage
beyond those required by COBRA.
COBRA beneficiaries generally are
eligible for group coverage during
a maximum of 18 months for
qualifying events due to
employment termination or
reduction of hours of work.
Certain qualifying events, or a
second qualifying event during the
initial period of coverage, may
permit a beneficiary to receive a
maximum of 36 months of coverage.
Coverage begins on the date that
coverage would otherwise have been
lost by reason of a qualifying
event and will end at the end of
the maximum period. It may end
earlier if:
-
Premiums are not paid on a timely
basis
-
The employer ceases to maintain
any group health plan
-
After the COBRA election, coverage
is obtained with another employer
group health plan that does not
contain any exclusion or
limitation with respect to any
pre-existing condition of such
beneficiary. However, if other
group health coverage is obtained
prior to the COBRA election, COBRA
coverage may not be discontinued,
even if the other coverage
continues after the COBRA
election.
-
After the COBRA election, a
beneficiary becomes entitled to
Medicare benefits. However, if
Medicare is obtained prior to
COBRA election, COBRA coverage may
not be discontinued, even if the
other coverage continues after the
COBRA election.
Although COBRA specifies certain
periods of time that continued
health coverage must be offered to
qualified beneficiaries, COBRA
does not prohibit plans from
offering continuation health
coverage that goes beyond the
COBRA periods.
Some
plans allow participants and
beneficiaries to convert group
health coverage to an individual
policy. If this option is
generally available from the plan,
a qualified beneficiary who pays
for COBRA coverage must be given
the option of converting to an
individual policy at the end of
the COBRA continuation coverage
period. The option must be given
to enroll in a conversion health
plan within 180 days before COBRA
coverage ends. The premium for a
conversion policy may be more
expensive than the premium of a
group plan, and the conversion
policy may provide a lower level
of coverage. The conversion
option, however, is not available
if the beneficiary ends COBRA
coverage before reaching the end
of the maximum period of COBRA
coverage.
Who pays for COBRA coverage?
Beneficiaries may be required to
pay for COBRA coverage. The
premium cannot exceed 102 percent
of the cost to the plan for
similarly situated individuals who
have not incurred a qualifying
event, including both the portion
paid by employees and any portion
paid by the employer before the
qualifying event, plus 2 percent
for administrative costs.
For
qualified beneficiaries receiving
the 11 month disability extension
of coverage, the premium for those
additional months may be increased
to 150 percent of the plan's total
cost of coverage.
COBRA
premiums may be increased if the
costs to the plan increase but
generally must be fixed in advance
of each 12-month premium cycle.
The plan must allow you to pay
premiums on a monthly basis if you
ask to do so, and the plan may
allow you to make payments at
other intervals (weekly or
quarterly).
The
initial premium payment must be
made within 45 days after the date
of the COBRA election by the
qualified beneficiary. Payment
generally must cover the period of
coverage from the date of COBRA
election retroactive to the date
of the loss of coverage due to the
qualifying event. Premiums for
successive periods of coverage are
due on the date stated in the plan
with a minimum 30-day grace period
for payments. Payment is
considered to be made on the date
it is sent to the plan.
If
premiums are not paid by the first
day of the period of coverage, the
plan has the option to cancel
coverage until payment is received
and then reinstate coverage
retroactively to the beginning of
the period of coverage.
If
the amount of the payment made to
the plan is made in error but is
not significantly less than the
amount due, the plan is required
to notify you of the deficiency
and grant a reasonable period (for
this purpose, 30 days is
considered reasonable) to pay the
difference. The plan is not
obligated to send monthly premium
notices.
COBRA
beneficiaries remain subject to
the rules of the plan and
therefore must satisfy all costs
related to co-payments and
deductibles, and are subject to
catastrophic and other benefit
limits.
Can I receive COBRA benefits while
on FMLA leave?
The
Family and Medical Leave Act,
effective August 5, 1993, requires
an employer to maintain coverage
under any group health plan for an
employee on FMLA leave under the
same conditions coverage would
have been provided if the employee
had continued working. Coverage
provided under the FMLA is not
COBRA coverage, and FMLA leave is
not a qualifying event under
COBRA. A COBRA qualifying event
may occur, however, when an
employer's obligation to maintain
health benefits under FMLA ceases,
such as when an employee notifies
an employer of his or her intent
not to return to work.
Am I eligible for COBRA if my
company closed or went bankrupt
and there is no health plan?
If
there is no longer a health plan,
there is no COBRA coverage
available. If, however, there is
another plan offered by the
company, you may be covered under
that plan. Union members who are
covered by a collective bargaining
agreement that provides for a
medical plan also may be entitled
to continued coverage.
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